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Banshee
Howls at bike show
Oshawa / Whitby This Week
Written by by Jillian Follert
Wednesday, 07 February 2007
Oshawa – Mike Yurko is no stranger to winning
big at bike shows - but this time he wasn't even
trying. The Oshawa chopper shop owner headed to
the North American International Motorcycle Show
in Toronto earlier this month, hoping to sell a
few T-Shirts emblazoned with the Yurko Custom
Choppers logo. Instead, he walked away with a
five-foot trophy for his latest creation, the
Banshee. This isn't even a show bile, it's a
personal bike built for everyday riding," he
said this week. "But it won. I think they liked
the attention to detail and the fact that this
bike is really amazing, but also really
functional. Some of the stuff you see is so
off-the-wall, you wonder if people can even ride
it."
The Banshee, a gleaming red and chrome chopper
chock full of subtle details, took first place
and best in show in the builder class, edging
out about 30 other bikes for the honour. The
annual event is the world's largest consumer
motorcycle show, according to the American
Motorcycle Industry Council. The Banshee came
into being this fall, when Brooklin resident
Tony Scott approached Mr. Yurko about building
him a custom bike. He had a motorcycle already,
but wanted something more unique that expressed
his personality. "I'm Scottish, so we looked for
ways to tie in my heritage," he explained. "We
went through some Scottish and Irish mythology
and when I saw the banshee I knew it was
perfect." In Scottish folklore, the banshee is a
ghostly woman who appears as an omen of death.
The bike is painted a deep red to reflect the
creature's fiery strength and seductive nature
and features graphics of the mythological woman
and a poem printed in faint script along the
side.
Mr. Scott said allot of bike enthusiasts would
be shocked to learn the Banshee was built in
Durham and came in around $40,000. "There's this
huge misconception out there that you have to go
to the States to get bikes like this or that
they're really, really expensive, like
$100,000," he noted. Mr.Yurko said these myths
can be largely attributed to popular reality
shows like American Chopper and Biker Build-Off,
but adds the shows are also good for the
industry because they introduce the masses to
the idea of unique, custom bikes. After taking
the Banshee to a few other shows this spring,
Mr. Yurko hopes to finish a vintage '63 Harley
he affectionately refers to as "the Johnny Cash
Special" and finds his next custom bike client.
He also hopes to build another theme bike
sponsored by a corporate partner, like the
DeWalt Lightning that was the first place entry
at last year's North American International
Motorcycle Show.
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